Cotton farmers oppose Goyal’s U.S. import remarks, warn of price crash


Cotton Farmers Oppose Goyal's U.S. Import Remarks — UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
Pre-2020s India is the world's 2nd largest cotton producer; Fazilka (Punjab) historically known as "Manchester of Punjab" for quality cotton. [S4]
2025-26 MSP Government raised cotton MSP by ~7% — Long-staple: ₹8,110/quintal; Medium-staple: ₹7,710/quintal (50%+ return over cost). [S2]
Jan 2026 India reinstated 11% import duty on raw cotton; textile output fell ~4%, apparel output fell ~10% YoY. [S2]
Feb 7, 2026 India–U.S. interim trade agreement framework announced; Indian export tariff notionally reduced to 18%. [S5]
Feb 9, 2026 U.S.–Bangladesh deal finalised — zero-tariff on textiles made from U.S. cotton. Goyal invokes same parity for India. [S1][S3]
Feb 16, 2026 The Hindu BusinessLine reports nationwide farmer protests; Goyal's statement becomes political flashpoint. [S4]

Predecessor context: India has historically operated duty-free imports under the Advance License Scheme for export-linked production, allowing mills to import cotton without full duty for re-export of processed goods. [S2]


4. Core Static Facts


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Geopolitical / Strategic

Social / Agrarian

Administrative / Governance

Environmental


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. The Cotton Corporation of India (CCI) functions under the Ministry of Textiles, not Agriculture. [S2]
  2. India's cotton MSP for long-staple variety in 2025-26 is ₹8,110 per quintal. [S2]
  3. MSP is designed to provide a minimum 50% return over the cost of production (as per Swaminathan Commission recommendation adopted by CCEA). [S2]
  4. CCI operationalised 570 procurement centres across 11 states for 2025-26 cotton procurement. [S2]
  5. India reinstated 11% import duty on raw cotton in January 2026. [S2]
  6. USDA FAS estimates India's cotton output at 24.5 million 480-lb bales for MY 2025-26. [S6]
  7. The Advance License Scheme permits duty-free import of raw cotton specifically for export-linked textile manufacturing. [S2]
  8. U.S.–Bangladesh interim trade deal (Feb 9, 2026) set Bangladesh's reciprocal tariff at 19%, down from the ~20% baseline. [S3]
  9. India's reciprocal tariff to the U.S. under the interim framework is 18% (original threatened rate: 50%). [S5]
  10. Fazilka district, Punjab, is historically called the "Manchester of Punjab" for high-quality cotton production. [S4]
  11. The farmer body leading protests is Bharatiya Kisan Union (Ekta-Ugrahan) — distinct from BKU (Tikait faction). [S4]
  12. Piyush Goyal holds the portfolio of Commerce & Industry (not Agriculture or Textiles). [S1]
  13. MSP for cotton is announced annually by the Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs (CCEA). [S2]

8. Mains Relevance

Dimension Detail
GS-II India–U.S. bilateral trade relations; trade negotiation mechanisms; WTO obligations vs. bilateral FTAs
GS-III Agriculture: MSP, price support mechanisms, farmer income; Trade policy: tariffs, export incentives, import duty; Indian economy: textile sector
GS-III Effects of liberalisation on agriculture; cropping pattern changes; commodity price volatility

Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "The India–U.S. interim trade agreement's zero-tariff textile provision highlights a structural conflict between India's export ambitions and domestic cotton farmer welfare. Critically analyse." (GS-III) 2. "Minimum Support Price mechanisms have been insufficient to insulate cotton farmers from global commodity price shocks. Examine the structural gaps and suggest reforms." (GS-III) 3. "Compare and contrast the trade concessions secured by India and Bangladesh in their respective interim trade deals with the United States in 2026. What does this reveal about India's negotiating leverage?" (GS-II)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Minimum Support Price (MSP) — Mechanism & Critique Central to farmer income protection; Swaminathan formula; CCEA process
India–U.S. Bilateral Trade Relations Interim trade deal, reciprocal tariffs, Trump-era trade architecture
WTO Agreement on Agriculture (AoA) MSP and public stockholding under WTO green/amber box rules
India's Textile & Apparel Sector Policy framework, PLI scheme, ATUFS; Goyal's proposal directly impacts this sector
Farmer Debt & Agrarian Crisis Cotton belt historically epicentre of farmer suicides; policy context
Bangladesh's RMG Sector & India Competition Why Bangladesh is the comparator; labour cost, GSP access, trade deal benchmarking
Advance Authorization (License) Scheme DGFT-administered duty-free import for export production; directly relevant here
India's Cotton Exports & CCI Role Production data, export trends, CCI as price stabilisation mechanism

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. CCI under wrong ministry: Aspirants often place Cotton Corporation of India under the Ministry of Agriculture — it falls under Ministry of Textiles. [S2]
  2. Confusing MSP varieties: Long-staple and medium-staple cotton have different MSPs (₹8,110 vs. ₹7,710 for 2025-26) — questions may test which is higher. [S2]
  3. Goyal's portfolio: He is Commerce & Industry minister, not Textiles (held by a separate minister) — attribution errors are common. [S1]
  4. Zero-tariff ≠ FTA: The zero-tariff textile provision is part of an interim bilateral framework, not a full Free Trade Agreement; WTO-consistency is a separate question. [S1][S5]
  5. Bangladesh deal rate: The Bangladesh reciprocal tariff was reduced to 19% (not zero overall) — the zero tariff applies specifically to textiles made from U.S.-sourced cotton, not all exports. [S3]

11. Sources